Medical and Hospital News  
ROCKET SCIENCE
Rocket Team Hot Fire AJ26 Flight Engine For Taurus II

Aerojet's AJ26 engine is an oxidizer-rich, staged-combustion LO2/Kerosene engine that achieves very high performance in a lightweight compact package.
by Staff Writers
Sacramento CA (SPX) Feb 10, 2011
Aerojet, a GenCorp company, along with NASA and Orbital Sciences Corporation, conducted the acceptance hot-fire test of the second AJ26 flight engine that will power the first stage of Orbital's Taurus II medium-class launch vehicle.

The test, conducted yesterday afternoon at NASA's Stennis Space Center in Mississippi, follows the successful acceptance tests conducted on Engine 1 in November and December 2010. Following the test, Engines 1 and 2 will be delivered to the Wallops Flight Facility launch site in Virginia for integration into the Taurus II first-stage core, as a main engine assembly.

"The successful test is another critical step toward the planned Taurus II first stage ground test in May 2011," said Executive Director, Pete Cova. "One of the keys to our successful testing is the Orbital, Aerojet and NASA Stennis test teams who continue to work together seamlessly with mission success as their priority."

Aerojet's AJ26 engine is an oxidizer-rich, staged-combustion LO2/Kerosene engine that achieves very high performance in a lightweight compact package.

Based on the NK-33 engine originally designed and produced in Russia for the Russian N1 lunar launch vehicle, the liquid-fuel AJ26 will provide boost for the first stage of the Taurus II launch vehicle. This testing is being conducted to support the Taurus II Initial Launch Capability (ILC) in the third quarter of 2011.

Aerojet originally purchased approximately 40 NK-33 engines in the mid-1990s and, under contract with Orbital, the company has modified the engines specifically for the Taurus II medium-class launch vehicle.

Throughout the years, more than 200 NK-33 engines were built and 575 engine tests conducted, totaling more than 100,000 seconds of test time. Aerojet has been developing design modifications to the NK-33 since that time to ensure that the AJ26 is suitable for commercial launchers.

The Taurus II medium-class launch vehicle is being developed to boost payloads into a variety of low-Earth and geosynchronous transfer orbits and to Earth escape trajectories. Taurus II incorporates proven technologies from Orbital's Pegasus, Taurus and Minotaur rockets, and is supported by a "best-in-class" network of suppliers from the U.S. and around the world.

The Taurus II rocket also will be available to civil government and U.S. military customers for dedicated launch services for medium-class scientific and national security satellites. Taurus II will be capable of supporting mid-inclination and polar orbiting spacecraft weighing 10,000 lbs. and 5,500 lbs., respectively.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Aerojet
Rocket Science News at Space-Travel.Com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


ROCKET SCIENCE
Euro-US partners eye 'low-cost' space launcher: report
Paris (AFP) Feb 8, 2011
European technology firm Astrium is teaming up with US company Alliant to make a "low-cost" space rocket launcher that could one day take tourists into orbit, the Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday. It said the companies plan a 300-foot (91-metre) launcher dubbed "Liberty" to take astronauts and scientific payloads into space for about $180 million (132 million euros) a time, 40 percent ... read more







ROCKET SCIENCE
Australia flags taxpayer levy for floods

Australia PM introduces contentious floods tax

Australian MPs weep for disaster victims

Disasters could reverse growth: Australia

ROCKET SCIENCE
Russia To Launch Glonass Satellite Feb 24

SkyTraq Introduces Low-Power High-Performance GLONASS/GPS Receiver

JAXA Selects Spirent For Multi-GNSS Testing

Nokia in maps tie-up with China's Sina, Tencent

ROCKET SCIENCE
Multiculturalism loses appeal in Europe

Bleak future seen for U.K. brain research

Bone indicates our ancestor walked upright

Mathematical Model Explains How Complex Societies Emerge And Collapse

ROCKET SCIENCE
Man caught laden with rare animals at Thai airport

Armenia asks hunters to kill off wolf threat

Researchers Discover Giant Crayfish Species Right Under Their Noses

Putting The Dead To Work For Conservation Biology

ROCKET SCIENCE
20 dead of swine flu in China in 2011: ministry

Fear of infection drove AIDS decline in Zimbabwe

Two die after swine flu infection in Hong Kong

Universal flu vaccine successfully tested: report

ROCKET SCIENCE
Online campaign spurs China kidnap crackdown

China blog spotlights missing-child problem

Video of blind activist surfaces in China

China orders pro-party reporting: rights groups

ROCKET SCIENCE
Malaysia: Pirates face death penalty

S. Korea ship sails on after pirate seizure

S.Korea navy kills Somali pirates, saves crew: military

International efforts against piracy widen

ROCKET SCIENCE
China regional banks told to hike reserves: report

China raises interest rates to tame inflation

Outside View: Dow heads for 13,000

China Jan-Feb inflation may top 5%: state media


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement